With the dogs, coyotes etc. I decided to wire the "RUN".... Here is how I did it.....
My 20 year old fencer came in handy...... Hot Wire and Ground wire....

The ground wire "ATTACHES" to all the wire enclosure and roofing panels for "THE GROUND SYSTEM"... I do not have a ground rod installed... the soil is too dry here about 8 months of the year....

The chicken wire and roof panels
are connected and part of the
ground system ....

The "HOT" wire is attached to insulators just above the roofing panels .... If an animal puts it's paws or nose above the panels to "LOOK" in the run, and comes in contact with the hot wire and any of the grounded "stuff"..... 6-8,000 volts, in a momentary discharge, will be felt.... I think the charger said the jolt was about 250 milliseconds... or about 1/4 of a second.... similar to a static electricity shock you would get from your carpet or sliding across the car seat and touching the door handle....
Insulated "ELECTRIC FENCE" wire runs to the 2 loops.... the "MAN" door is where the 2 loops meet....
USE ONLY "ELECTRIC FENCE INSULATED WIRE" for this connection.... normal insulated wire "WILL NOT" resist anything over 600 volts and your electric system "WILL NOT WORK" properly.... you do need the 10,000 volt insulation value.....
loop 1 loop 2

The man door wiring..... HOT on the insulators.... ground connected to the cage wire.....
Coils of wire to facilitate "FLEXING" of the wire.....

more grounding

more grounding.... all the way around the run.....

When I use the "Electric Fence Tester", the cage wiring and metal panels show the ground system is working properly...
My 20 year old fencer came in handy...... Hot Wire and Ground wire....
The ground wire "ATTACHES" to all the wire enclosure and roofing panels for "THE GROUND SYSTEM"... I do not have a ground rod installed... the soil is too dry here about 8 months of the year....
The chicken wire and roof panels
are connected and part of the
ground system ....
The "HOT" wire is attached to insulators just above the roofing panels .... If an animal puts it's paws or nose above the panels to "LOOK" in the run, and comes in contact with the hot wire and any of the grounded "stuff"..... 6-8,000 volts, in a momentary discharge, will be felt.... I think the charger said the jolt was about 250 milliseconds... or about 1/4 of a second.... similar to a static electricity shock you would get from your carpet or sliding across the car seat and touching the door handle....
Insulated "ELECTRIC FENCE" wire runs to the 2 loops.... the "MAN" door is where the 2 loops meet....
USE ONLY "ELECTRIC FENCE INSULATED WIRE" for this connection.... normal insulated wire "WILL NOT" resist anything over 600 volts and your electric system "WILL NOT WORK" properly.... you do need the 10,000 volt insulation value.....
loop 1 loop 2
The man door wiring..... HOT on the insulators.... ground connected to the cage wire.....
Coils of wire to facilitate "FLEXING" of the wire.....
more grounding
more grounding.... all the way around the run.....
When I use the "Electric Fence Tester", the cage wiring and metal panels show the ground system is working properly...
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